As
I have written—time, after time, after time—in 1792, the Senate directed
President Washington’s Secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, to draft
a financial statement listing the “salaries, fees, and emoluments” of “every
person holding any civil office or employment under the United States (except
the Judges).”[1] Hamilton and
the Treasury Department took more than nine months to draft and submit a
response, which spanned some ninety manuscript-sized pages. In his responsive 1793 (Complete)
Report, Hamilton included appointed
officers in each of the three branches of the federal government, including the
Legislative Branch (e.g., the Secretary of the Senate and Clerk of the House). But
Hamilton did not include the President, Vice President, Senators, or
Representatives. In other words, Hamilton did not include any elected officials in any branch.[2]
Here
is what Mike Stern, at Point of Order blog, recently wrote about Hamilton’s 1793 (Complete) Report:
Hamilton might have decided not to
include the president and vice president in his response [i.e., the 1793 (Complete) Report] even if he believed
that the literal terms of the Senate resolution so required. For one thing, he
may have questioned the Senate’s authority to compel him to make inquiry of the president. Congress’s authority
to obtain information directly from the president was an unsettled and delicate
matter in 1792 (as it remains to some degree today). The traditional protocol, reflected in resolutions of inquiry, was
for the House or Senate to “request” information from the president but to
“direct” department heads to produce information.[3] For the Senate
to order the Secretary of the Treasury to obtain financial information from
President Washington and to report any refusal or failure to cooperate on
Washington’s part to the Senate would seem, at the very least, to push the bounds
of protocol and constitutional propriety.
Perhaps more importantly, interpreting the Senate resolution in such a fashion
risked putting Hamilton in an untenable position if the president declined to
cooperate.[4]
Let’s
be clear. Congress was neither seeking records of internal deliberations, nor
confidential communications (or advice) between the President and his subordinates.
Likewise, Congress was not seeking secret or confidential communications
between the American diplomatic corps (including the President) and foreign
officials (or domestic Indian tribes).
What
was Congress seeking here? The compensation of those holding office . . . under the United
States. The President’s and Vice President’s compensation were set by
statute in 1789[5]—so there was no
need for Hamilton or anyone else to make inquiries. There was no need to ask
the President or Vice President anything—there was no need to “compel,”[6] demand, or even
request the cooperation of the President or Vice President or anyone else in regard
to the President’s and Vice President’s compensation. The matter at issue was
one of public record. Full stop. Stern also suggests that Hamilton might have
doubted the Senate’s authority to “compel” his
compliance with the Senate order. I do not claim to know what Hamilton’s private thoughts were—even assuming he gave the matter any thought at all. But I do know
precisely how he responded to the Senate order. In his signed cover letter to the
Senate, Hamilton stated that his report, i.e., the 1793 (Complete) Report, was “transmit[ted]” “in obedience to the [Senate] order.”[7] That is some
good evidence indicating that Hamilton thought he was obliged to obey the
Senate order.
Stern
continues:
The [1792 Senate] resolution requires
the Secretary of the Treasury to interrogate
every covered official and to “report the name of every person who shall
neglect or refuse to give satisfactory information” regarding his compensation
and expenses. It exempts judges, presumably because of separation of powers
considerations. Similar considerations, not to mention self-interest, would
likely have led the Senate to exclude its own members from the scope of the
Secretary’s work. Moreover, interpreting the resolution to apply to members of
the House would have resulted in a serious breach of comity between the two
houses. Indeed, it is not at all obvious that the Senate has the constitutional
authority to interrogate members of the House, either directly or through the
Secretary of the Treasury.[8]
There
are any number of things wrong with Stern’s narrative and analysis. For
example, Stern’s use of “interrogat[ion]” language, much like his prior use of
“compel,” is overwrought. Hamilton’s complying with the Senate order did not require
the Secretary to “interrogate” anyone. Hamilton had access to any number of
public (including Treasury Department[9]) records, and
in addition to public records, he could contact, and indeed, he did contact,
any number of government officers by (snail) mail for further information.
Asking elected and appointed public officials and officers to supply
information is not customarily denominated an “interrogation.” Moreover, where
the information sought is already public or requested by a senior Executive Branch officer on
behalf of a house of Congress, both public officials and officers, elected or
appointed, should have some substantial reason justifying noncompliance.
Likewise,
Stern’s separation of powers and comity explanations are plainly at odds with well
known historical records. In response to the Senate’s 1792 order, Hamilton wrote the Clerk of the House
and Secretary of the Senate, seeking information relating to their compensation
and that of their subordinates, and that information was included in Hamilton’s
1793 (Complete) Report. To the extent
that the extant documentation reveals, separation of powers and intercameral comity
were not at issue. Notwithstanding that the request for information originated
in the Senate, the Clerk of the House of Representatives did not object to
supplying the information sought by the Secretary of the Treasury. That shows
that intercameral comity was not at issue. Again, notwithstanding that the
request for information was a directive from the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Clerk of the House and Secretary of the Senate did not object to supplying the
information sought. That shows that separation of powers concerns were not at
issue.
Nor
is that all. As stated above, Stern’s separation of powers and comity explanations are plainly at odds with other well
known historical records. During Hamilton’s tenure at Treasury, Hamilton and the Treasury issued dozens of circulars, memoranda, and reports.[10] One
such report was the Report on an Account
of the Receipts and Expenditures of the United States for the Year 1792 [“The
1792 Report”].[11] The two reports—The 1792 Report and the 1793 (Complete) Report—were issued less than one calendar year apart, and both were issued by: Hamilton and the Treasury Department during Hamilton’s tenure as Secretary. The 1792 Report was
generated in response to a House inquiry. On December 30, 1791, the House issued
the following directive:
That it shall be the duty
of the Secretary of the Treasury to lay before the House of Representatives, on
the fourth Monday of October in each year, if Congress shall be then
in session, or if not then in session, within the first week of the session
next following the said fourth Monday of October, an accurate statement and
account of the receipts and expenditures of all public moneys . . . .[12]
The 1793 (Complete) Report used the very specific “office . . . under the United States”-language, but The 1792 Report used more general language relating to “receipts and expenditures of all public moneys.” How
did Hamilton and the Treasury Department, in The 1792 Report, respond to the 1791 House directive?
1.
The 1792 Report included: the President and Vice President.[13] Documentary evidence
of Stern’s hypothesis that such a request implicated concerns about the
“Senate’s authority to compel [the Secretary of the Treasury] to make inquiry
of the [P]resident”[14] is wholly
absent, as is any evidence relating to concerns about “the bounds of protocol
and constitutional propriety.”[15]
2.
The 1792 Report included: the Article
III judges and their clerks.[16] Documentary
evidence of Stern’s suggestion that an inquiry about the compensation of
Article III judges might trip “separation of powers considerations”[17] is wholly
absent.
3.
The 1792 Report included: appointed House and Senate officers,
such as the Clerk of the House and Secretary of the Senate. Likewise, The 1792 Report included the
compensation of elected members of
the House and Senate. Such compensation was not merely listed in gross for each house, but, in fact, The 1792 Report listed the compensation
of each member individually based on
his individual per diem.[18] Both houses provided
(at some point) the necessary information for Hamilton and the Treasury
Department to compile this report. According to Stern, “separation of powers
considerations … [and] self-interest” would likely have led the house making the
original inquiry “to exclude its own members from the scope of the Secretary’s”[19] inquiry. But
here, the House made the inquiry and The
1792 Report included financial information relating to both elected and
appointed House members and officers.[20]
Again,
according to Stern, if one house made an inquiry, the other house was not
likely to respond because such an inquiry “would have resulted in a serious
breach of comity between the two houses.”[21] But that is
precisely what happened here. Here, the House made the inquiry and The 1792 Report included financial
information relating to both elected and appointed Senate members and officers.[22]
Now
if Stern wants to argue that Hamilton and his Treasury Department staff forgot
to include the President and Vice President in Hamilton’s 1793 (Complete) Report, he can, but it remains a bold and unsupported conjecture. Where is his evidence? Stern also insinuates that documents suggesting that “the Treasury
Department did consider the president and vice president to hold ‘civil office
or employment under the United States’ within the meaning of the 1792 Senate
resolution . . . may have been lost or destroyed.”[23] Lost or destroyed
documents might support or contradict Stern’s favored
position—there is simply no fair way to assess the possibilities and
probabilities in regard to documents that we cannot examine. Indeed, there is
no good reason to think that any such lost or destroyed documents had anything
at all to say in regard to the issue at hand.
The
plain fact remains that Hamilton and the Treasury Department (during Hamilton’s
tenure) remembered to include (and did include) the President and Vice
President in The 1792 Report —albeit The 1792 Report
used operative language very different from the 1793 (Complete) Report’s “office . . . under the
United States”-language. Despite Stern’s purported concerns
relating to “interrogations,” “separation of powers,” intercameral “comity,”
etc., The 1792 Report included elected officials, e.g., the President. The plain fact is that Hamilton’s 1793 (Complete) Report is systematically and noticeably different from The 1792 Report—that difference is telling.
I
regret that Mike Stern refuses to see what a good many others who have taken
the time to review these documents have come to understand.[24] But more than I
regret that, I am floored that, at this late date, he would write: “The full
Hamilton Report is only available at
the National Archives so I am basing my comments on excerpts that are available online.”[25] Stern’s comment
is both wrong in principle and wrong in fact. As to principle, we are now no
longer writing—as academic scribblers—about abstract ideas; rather, the Nation
is now in the midst of serious and concrete litigation involving the President
and the future shape of our democracy. If Mike Stern wants to opine on these
documents—he should trouble himself to examine a complete copy before
responding. As to fact, these documents are freely available, online and
elsewhere. He could go to the archives. He could write the archivists. He could
write the curators at the Alexander
Hamilton Papers Project. He could write the five authors of the Legal
Historians brief. He could visit the website created by Professors Shugerman
and Rao. He could have written me seeking a copy of one of my sources—something
he has done before. And the fact of the matter is, these documents are all already
online, and they have been online for some time. I ought to know: Professor
Blackman and I put them there.[26] If Stern had
examined the complete original document, i.e., the 1793 (Complete) Report, he
would have seen that many (but not all) of the annexes reported their
information both annually and quarterly, and he may also have discovered why
that was the case. This is something Mike Stern could have done before telling
the public that Hamilton’s response substantially departed from the Senate
order.
There
was a complete and exhaustive effort by 5 legal historians (in conjunction with
several other academics and litigators) to revisit my 2008 and post-2008
research in regard to the 1793 (Complete)
Report.[27] They revisited
my findings all the way down to the signatures and purported signatures on the
archived documents and typeset reproductions. And they ultimately agreed with
my primary conclusions—at least in regard to authenticity. Now Stern wants to convince the world that the one-and-only
original Hamilton-signed document does not mean what it plainly says. Hamilton
was asked to supply a list of every person holding “office . . .
under the United States” and their emoluments. Hamilton did not include the
President in his list. I know what that means, so do you, and I suspect so does
Mike Stern, and if he does not know now, I am hopeful he will come to the more
sensible conclusion in the not too distant future. To be clear, I did not argue
(in my brief) that the 1793 (Complete)
Report standing along and without more is conclusive evidence or proof** as to the
scope of the Constitution’s “office . . . under the United
States”-language. But it is certainly some probative evidence, particularly in
conjunction with the public practice of Presidents during the Federalist
Era and Early Republic in regard to their receiving gifts from foreign governments
and their officials. The 1793 (Complete)
Report is some evidence as to how “office . . . under the
United States” was used and understood among the reasonably well educated
bench, bar, and public in late eighteenth century America. Maybe there are
arguments which undermine my position, and maybe there are not. But the
position I put forward cannot be undermined by Stern’s hypothesizing that no longer
extant documents would explain away the difficulty which peculiarly confronts
Stern’s position (as opposed to my position). Just imagine if the tables were
reversed. Imagine if the Legal Historians managed to establish (against all
reason) that the Condensed Report (i.e., the circa 1830 copy published in American State Papers which included the President and VP) was
an original and bona fide Hamilton-signed document? Would they or Stern or
anyone in the world allow me to argue:
Would I be allowed to advance that argument? Would Stern or you accept it if I did? Of course not—of course not. No sensible person would advance such an argument. No one can predicate arguments based on documents which he cannot produce unless he has some direct evidence in regard to those documents and their specific contents. Stern does not even begin to carry that extraordinarily heavy burden.
My (Tillman’s) theory remains correct, Hamilton included the President
by mistake or for specific reasons having nothing to do with the scope of the
Senate resolution’s operative ‘office . . . under the United
States’-language. And my position would be borne out by documents now long lost
and destroyed, but which I cannot even hope to produce.
Would I be allowed to advance that argument? Would Stern or you accept it if I did? Of course not—of course not. No sensible person would advance such an argument. No one can predicate arguments based on documents which he cannot produce unless he has some direct evidence in regard to those documents and their specific contents. Stern does not even begin to carry that extraordinarily heavy burden.
If
you believe (as I do) that Stern’s recent effort failed, as did the prior
effort, then that is some good reason to accept the alternative position: viz.
the President does not hold an office . . .
under the United States. As Chief Justice McKean explained “It is in
argument, in law, and in logic, as it is in nature (destructio unius, est generatio alterius) that the destruction of
an objection, begets a proof.”[28]
[As for Stern’s remaining objections, I’ll
address them on another occasion or occasions, as I have time. And some are addressed in the footnotes below.]
Seth
Seth
Barrett Tillman, You Do Understand That
The 1793 (Complete) Report Was Not Hamilton’s Only Such Report, Right?—Letter to Mike Stern & Point of Order Blog, New Reform Club (Nov. 27, 2017, 5:35 AM), https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2017/11/you-do-understand-that-1793-complete.html
[1] 1 Journal of the Senate of the U.S.A. 441 (1820) (May 7,
1792 entry) (emphases added) (commas omitted).
[2] The transmittal letter of the 1793
(Complete) Report appears at Exhibit K, http://bit.ly/2xkY1Pc. The cover letter of the 1793 (Complete) Report appears at Exhibit L, http://bit.ly/2fj6IQ0. Annexes I, II, and IV–XVIII of the 1793 (Complete) Report appear at Exhibit M, http://bit.ly/2eV95bn. Annex III of the 1793
(Complete) Report appears at Exhibit N, http://bit.ly/2h1kdre. Lastly, Annex XIX of the 1793 (Complete) Report appears at Exhibit O, http://bit.ly/2fiX00f. The exhibits, supra,
relate to my amicus brief and filings in: Amicus
Curiae Scholar
Seth Barrett Tillman’s and Proposed Amicus
Curiae Judicial Education Project’s Response to Amici Curiae by Certain Legal Historians at 3 n.6, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in
Washington v. Donald J. Trump, President of the United States of America,
Civ. A. No. 1:17-cv-00458-GBD (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 19, 2017) (Daniels, J.) (filed by
Professor Josh Blackman, Robert W. Ray, Esq., and Carrie Severino, Esq.), Doc.
No. 85-1, 2017 WL 4685886, 2017 U.S. Dist. Ct. Briefs LEXIS 408, https://ssrn.com/abstract=3002345,
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6pbwibK31LaN1k4aWw1WEJ0REk/view. In short,
there are five internet documents,
including two available at no cost,
from which Mike Stern or anyone else can find links to the 1793 (Complete) Report or the report itself.
[3] Is not
Stern’s comment here a fancy way of saying what I have been saying continuously
since 2008: i.e., that Congress has always distinguished between elected officials and appointed officers?
[4] Mike Stern, Why
Tillman’s Experts Show He is Wrong, Point
of Order: A Discussion of Congressional Legal Issues (Oct. 22, 2017,
12:47 PM), http://www.pointoforder.com/2017/10/22/why-tillmans-experts-show-he-is-wrong/ (emphases
added) (footnote added).
[5] See
Act of Sept. 24,
1789, ch. 19, § 1, 1 Stat. 72 (setting the President’s
and Vice President’s compensation
at $25,000 and $5,000 per year respectively, in “full compensation for their respective services,” but not providing
for expenses (emphasis added)); infra
note 11 (discussing “expenses”). I see no indication in this statute that the
President or Vice President were entitled to any discretionary expenses, even
in the normal course of their duties. See
also Act of Sept. 22,
1789, ch. 17, 1 Stat. 70–71 (setting the compensation of
members of Congress and congressional officers); cf. Act of Sept. 11,
1789, ch. 13, 1 Stat. 67–68 (setting salaries
for some senior appointed officers and their subordinates). Addendum of December 1, 2017: It is conceivable that some other statute (impliedly or expressly) granted the President exprenses or that the President was paid expenses under the authority of some sort of tradition or common law in connection with government service. Still any such reimbursements would ultimately be paid to the President by the Treasury Department (as a warrant or draft against the federal treasury). Thus even for presidential expenses, assuming there were any, Hamilton and his Treasury Deparment staff would have had all the relevant records, and there was no need to “interrogate” the President in regard to any such information or records.
[6] See Stern, supra note 4.
[7] The cover letter of the 1793 (Complete) Report appears at
Exhibit L, http://bit.ly/2fj6IQ0.
[8] Stern, supra note 4
(emphasis added).
[9] Act of Sept. 22,
1789, ch. 17, § 6, 1 Stat. 70, 71 (setting the compensation
of members of Congress and congressional officers, and explaining that all such
payments shall be “certified” by the presiding officer, and “shall be passed as
public accounts, and paid out of the public treasury”).
[10] See
generally A List of Treasury Reports
and Circulars Issued by Alexander Hamilton, 1789–1795 (Paul Leicester
Ford ed., Brooklyn 1886), https://archive.org/details/listoftreasuryre00fordrich. One could also
look to American State Papers
(subject to the well known limitations associated with that source),
particularly volume 1 of the financial series, and also volume 1 of the miscellaneous series), https://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsp&fileName=009/llsp009.db&recNum=5. Stern has other conjectures seeking to explain why Hamilton left the President off his 1793 (Complete) Report. See Stern, supra note 4 (“[Hamilton] may have determined that the use of the word ‘civil’ [in the Senate order] created an ambiguity because the president serves as commander in chief”: without any attempt by Stern to explain why the Vice President was not part of Hamilton’s list). It is long past time for Stern (and others) to drop this commander-in-chief argument. It is plainly falsified by any number of Hamilton-era Treasury Department documents placing the President in the “civil” list, and not in the War Department or military list. This argument ought to be a complete non-starter. How many other such arguments will Stern and others put forward to convince themselves and others that the original Hamilton-signed document is not probative?
[11] Report on an Account of the Receipts and
Expenditures of the United States for the Year 1792 [“The 1792 Report”], in 15 Papers of Alexander Hamilton 474–545, http://rotunda.upress.virginia.edu/founders/default.xqy?keys=ARHN-print-01-15-02-0395 (dated December
18, 1793, and communicated December 19, 1793, and published by order of the
House of Representatives, printed by John Fenno, No. 3, South Fourth Street, Philadelphia,
1794. Another copy of the cover letter for this report may be found in RG 233, Reports of the Secretary of the Treasury,
1784–1795, vol. IV, National Archives); see
supra note 5 (noting that the President’s compensation at $25,000 per year was
described as “full compensation” absent any reference to discretionary expenses, even in the
normal course of his duties). I add that The
1792 Report expressly identifies a variety of “expenses” (apart from regular
“compensation”), e.g., for the Judicial Branch, The 1792 Report, supra, at
499–504; for senior (appointed) Executive Branch and other (appointed) Executive Branch officers, id. at 510–12
(listing the Treasury Department’s expenses), id. at 512 (listing State Department’s expenses); for both the House and Senate as separate collective entities, id. at 505–10; and also for particular
purposes, including carrying out the census, id. at 543. But no expenses are expressly identified for any specific
elected officials. See generally supra note 5 (discussing “expenses”).
[12] 1 Journal of the House 484 (emphases
added).
[13] See The 1792 Report, supra note 11, at 498 (including the
President’s and Vice President’s compensation).
[16] See The 1792 Report, supra note 11, at 499–504 (including compensation
for the federal judiciary and their clerks).
[18] See The 1792 Report, supra note 11, at 505–10 (including
House and Senate compensation—in gross, and compensation of particular members,
and compensation of congressional administration officers).
[20] See The 1792 Report, supra note 18.
[22] See The 1792 Report, supra note 18.
[24] Compare Brief of Amicus Curiae by Certain Legal Historians on Behalf of Plaintiffs
at 22 n.81–82, Citizens for
Responsibility and Ethics in Washington v. Donald J. Trump, President of the
United States of America, Civ. A. No. 1:17-cv-00458-GBD (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 11,
2017) (Daniels, J.) (filed by Professor Jack N. Rakove et al.), Doc. No. 70-1, 2017 WL 5483629, 2017 U.S. Dist. Ct.
Motions LEXIS 406 (citing Tillman’s amicus brief and objecting to its claims
relating to the 1793 (Complete) Report),
http://guptawessler.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/LegalHistorians.pdf, with John Mikhail, Our correction and apology to Professor
Tillman, Balkinization (Oct. 3, 2017, 8:30 PM) (retracting claims in the Legal
Historians brief relating to the 1793 (Complete) Report, and signed by
Professor Jack Rakove et al.), https://balkin.blogspot.ie/2017/10/our-correction-and-apology-to-professor.html; compare also Gautham Rao
& Jed Handelsman Shugerman, Presidential
Revisionism, Slate (July 17,
2017, 5:42 PM) (objecting to Blackman and Tillman’s claims relating to the 1793 (Complete) Report), http://tinyurl.com/y7qaabr4, with no
retraction. See generally Brian Galle (@BDGesq) on Twitter, A nice analysis that
shows, among other things, the importance of the doc SBT decided the court
didn’t need to see (Oct. 22, 2017, 6:08 PM), https://twitter.com/BDGesq/status/922268426613256192
(citing Mike Stern’s Point of Order blog post); Mike Palazzo (@joe_palazzolo) on Twitter, Interesting (and thorough) response to
contention that Foreign Emoluments Clause doesn’t apply to president or VP
(Oct. 23, 2017, 7:22 AM), twitter.com/joe_palazzolo/status/922468360792748032
(same).
[25] Stern, supra note 4 (emphases
added).
[26] See supra note 2 (reporting five
internet links, including two available at no cost, from which one can find
links to the 1793 (Complete) Report or
the report itself). These materials were
posted online more than 2 months ago.
[27] See supra note 24. See, e.g., Brianne J. Gorod, What Alexander
Hamilton Really Said, Take Care
(June 7, 2017), perma.cc/YCY8-XQC9; Brianne J. Gorod, A Little More on
Alexander Hamilton and the Foreign Emoluments Clause, Take Care (Aug. 1, 2017), perma.cc/U4A6-EMVG; Joshua Matz, Foreign
Emoluments, Alexander Hamilton & A Twitter Kerfuffle, Take Care (July 12, 2017), perma.cc/66Z7-VY76; see also
Norm Eisen (@normeisen) on
Twitter, devastating @BrianneGorod rebuttal of “evidence” for fringe
claim that emoluments clause doesnt apply to POTUS (July 6, 2017, 7:28 AM),
https://twitter.com/NormEisen/status/882969451557249025;
Laurence Tribe (@tribelaw) on Twitter,
Read this devastating reply to the weird claim that Hamilton thought
Presidents could accept Foreign Emoluments (July 6, 2017, 8:00 AM),
https://twitter.com/tribelaw/status/882977561986420736; Laurence
Tribe (@tribelaw) on Twitter, From
the “This Speaks For Itself” Department: Foreign Emoluments, Alexander Hamilton
& A Twitter Kerfuffle (July 13, 2017, 6:25 PM),
https://twitter.com/tribelaw/status/885671589542588416; Laurence Tribe (@tribelaw) on Twitter, A National Archives visit
obliterates @SethBTillman’s thesis that DJT isn’t covered by the Foreign
Emoluments Clause (Aug. 1, 2017, 6:48 AM) https://twitter.com/tribelaw/status/892381453312503808;
Laurence Tribe (@tribelaw) on Twitter,
Another devastating critique of Tillmania by @jedshug (Sept. 1, 2017,
7:20 PM), https://twitter.com/tribelaw/status/903804726717841409; cf. Mark Joseph Stern (@mjs_dc) on Twitter,
!! @BrianneGorod went to the National Archives to debunk the claim that the
Emoluments Clause doesn’t apply to Trump (Aug. 1, 2017, 11:36 am),
https://twitter.com/mjs_DC/status/892454064532934658 (apparently deleted by
author). See generally Glenda Gilmore (@GilmoreGlenda) on Twitter,
Trump lawyers use 1 Hamilton letter for
argument; bury 2nd Hamilton letter to the contrary written same day. Historians
know better (Aug. 31, 2017, 4:53 AM), https://twitter.com/GilmoreGlenda/status/903224236843704320. For Professor Gilmore’s (accomplished) biography see: https://history.yale.edu/people/glenda-gilmore. She has taught post-Civil War African-American history. Perhaps some day she might appreciate the irony.
[28] Boyd’s
Lessee v. Cowan, 4 U.S. 138, 141 (Penn. 1794) (McKean, C.J.), https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/4/138/case.html. McKean, a
proponent of the then proposed federal constitution, made the same argument at
the Pennsylvania ratification convention. See
2 Documentary History of the Ratification of
the Constitution: Pennsylvania 542 (McKean, on December 10, 1787, stating:
“It holds in argument as well as nature, that destructio unius est generatio alterius—the refutation of an
argument begets a proof.”), also
available at 2 Elliot’s Debates 541; see also 1 Annals of Cong. 560 (Congressman Fisher
Ames, on June 18, 1789, stating: “I believe nearly as good conclusions may be
drawn from the refutations of an argument as from any other proof. For it is
well said, that destructio unius est
generatio alterius.”); cf. Flora Lewis, Europe: The Road to Unity (1992) (“Pluralism
justifies itself by the falseness of the beliefs that oppose it.” (quoting
Raymond Aron)).
** Compare Blackman / Tillman Brief at 19 (“Like Washington’s acceptance of [Ambassador] Ternant’s gift of the framed portrait of Louis XVI, the Hamilton document is another probative Executive Branch construction of the Constitution’s office under the United States-language, which was established during Washington’s first term (and so contemporaneous with the ratification of the Constitution).”),
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2985843, with Stern, supra note 4:
Yes, Stern’s right: I believe Hamilton approved the document and its contents—that’s why he signed the transmittal letter, that’s why he signed the cover letter, and that’s why he signed several annexes. That’s the customary understanding of signing a document: it means you approve it. That Stern wants to contest the obvious or presumptive understanding of public acts by public officers acting in a public capacity is telling. And that Stern thinks the omission of the President of the United States might be an “oversight” by Hamilton, the President’s protégé ... and that he thinks it reasonable to shift on to me the burden of disproving his “oversight” hypothesis, rather than on him to put forward evidence that Hamilton and his department forgot to include the presidency (although remembering to include it in another contemporaneous departmental document) ... all that is something Mike Stern and I will have to agree to disagree on.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2985843, with Stern, supra note 4:
Before
getting into the nuts and bolts of the Hamilton Report, I want to stress that
Tillman’s reliance on the report depends on four assumptions about or
inferences from the report: (1) the omission of the president and vice
president from the report was a deliberate decision, rather than an oversight
or error; (2) this decision was made or approved by Hamilton personally; (3)
the decision was made for one specific reason, namely that the phrase ‘office
or employment under the United States’ excluded the president and vice
president; and (4) the interpretation of this phrase was based on the
unambiguous meaning of the words, rather than the context of their use or an
extra-textual source of information. None of these can be definitively proved
(or disproved), but Tillman evidently believes they can be adequately
established for his purposes.
Yes, Stern’s right: I believe Hamilton approved the document and its contents—that’s why he signed the transmittal letter, that’s why he signed the cover letter, and that’s why he signed several annexes. That’s the customary understanding of signing a document: it means you approve it. That Stern wants to contest the obvious or presumptive understanding of public acts by public officers acting in a public capacity is telling. And that Stern thinks the omission of the President of the United States might be an “oversight” by Hamilton, the President’s protégé ... and that he thinks it reasonable to shift on to me the burden of disproving his “oversight” hypothesis, rather than on him to put forward evidence that Hamilton and his department forgot to include the presidency (although remembering to include it in another contemporaneous departmental document) ... all that is something Mike Stern and I will have to agree to disagree on.
"Stern thinks the omission of the President of the United States might be an “oversight” by Hamilton, the President’s protégé ... and that he thinks it reasonable to shift on to me the burden of disproving his “oversight” hypothesis"
ReplyDelete"No it's not" is not an argument. Any mook can play Epistemologically Immovable Object.
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